THOUGHT FOR TODAY Those who have the most dif- ficulty in living through the period of adolescence are the adolescents' parents. - She Osha Snes WEATHER REPORT Sunny, becoming partly eloudy late Tuesday, little change in temperature, winds light. Price Not Over . 89--NO. 142 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, MONDAY, JUNE 20, 1960 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY PAGES wi |RIFLEMAN SLAYS TWO RKET HOME Johansson Favorite | In Title Bout NEW YORK (AP) -- Ingemar Johansson of Sweden defends his world heavyweight boxing cham- § pionship tonight against Floyd Patterson, the man Johansson | defeated for the title a year ago. The fight is scheduled fer the MINISTER AND BLACKSMITH ; Federal Labor: Minister Mi- | blacksmith in the small com- anvil were on one of the floats chael Starr learns some of the | munity of Greenwood for al- | in a parade Saturday, in- con- . ; 4 : : nection with the centennial cele- fine points of a dying art from. most 50 years before he retired brations of Greenwood School. 87-year-old Walter Wilson, a | last year. Mr, Wilson and his --Oshawa Times Photo BACK IN HONOLULU Ike Near End Of Asian Tour SEOUL (AP)--President Eisen-|of the Korean people is a mo- Korean War and "whose freedom hower left South Korea for Hono- mentous challenge." is dearer to them than life. lulu tonight, completing a Far| Before leaving Korea, Eisen-| The erowds in Seoul came | Polo Grounds in New York, start- ing at 10:30 p.m. EDT. The distance is 15 rounds or less, Last June Johansson knocked down Patterson seven times in the third round before their first bout was stopped. Johansson is a 7%- to-5 favorite this time. The weatherman predicts a cool, clear evening. Approxim- ately 30,000 fans are expected with general admission seats going on sale at the Ground] late today. There will be no national home television, A getwork radio broad- cast will be provided by the American Bro ad casting Com- pany. Closed circuit televsion | will be shown at 230 locations in| 1160 cities. | Patterson, Fried eggs and bacon were popular favorites at the fly-in now 25, was the THAT BACON IS HOTY Eastern tour cut short by rioting ot Heaur . - : ad hower, flew to the headquarters, ,,qy close to bursting|youngest man ever to win the breakfast of the Ontario County > (town 30 miles north of Toronto. il | the Wa | Be Flying Club, Oshawa Airport, | stowed away a record amount Sunday morning. Pilots from as | of food. For details of the event, far away as the United States | please turn to Page 9. attended the anpual affair and | | Oshawa Times Photo in Japan. of the 6th South Korean Army : : 3 ; \ Eisenhower left with a pledge Corps to place a wreath on the through lines of police and sol-| heavyweight championship when from South Korea's reform gov- black stone monument to the un-|diers standing several deep at he defeated Archie Moore fous ernment to guard against wasting known dead of the Korean War|the curbs along the president's| years ago. Patterson, a Negro the hundreds of millions of dol- lars m aid the United States pours in each year. "I pledge that we will do every- thing possible to ensure that American aid funds are wisely, efficiently and honestly used for| the benefit of all of the Korean) Chung de-| i and review troops of the United route, States, South Korea, Britain,| The throngs angrily objected to Turkey, Thailand and Ethiopia being asked to sit down on the guarding the frontier. concrete--a precaution to keep Speaking five days before the them from moving forward. They 10th anniversary of the start of surged out into the streets re- the war, the president paid trib-|peatedly until police used rifle ute to the J6 UN countries who butts, ra bout. His ability to deliver |who lives in Rockville ' Centre, [N.Y., would be the first heavy- weight ever to regain the title. | The 27-year-old Swede is famed | | for his right hand punching power | | which destroyed Patterson in the WASHINGTON (AP) = Presi- rapid series of seven and eight |dent Eisenhower will return home punches is his strong point. fought the Communists in the ER or tional! Airport, | Eisenhower is the first Ameri- ean president to tour the Orient while in office. A three-day visit to Japan was called off when the| Japanese government said it could not fully guarantee Eisen- hower's safety because of violent joting in Toky: 0. HOSTILITY IN OKINAWA The only anti-American demon-| stration Eisenhower actually saw was on Okinawa, where 1,500 pro - Japanese chanted "go home." Eisenhower urged leaders of the new South Korean govern- ment to make the most of their] opportunity to give the Commu-| nist-threatened land true democ-| racy. Referring to the revolt | against Syngman Rhee, he said| "prompt and judicious fulfillment of the recently expressed wishes PREMIER TO PARIS TOWER GUARD STRUMS GUITAR LONDON (AP)--There was a strange sound in the grim old Tower of London: Guitars strumming out that gay old tune It Must be Jelly, 'Cause Jam Don't Shake Like That. The patrol of the Grenadier Guards dashed off toward the sound of the strumming to find the sentry--in scarlet 3 uniform and bearskin hat-- Universe. performing a duet with the | Dr. Ronald N. Bracewell pre- young son of another guard. [sented his views in the British The sentry--his name for- . scientific journal Nature. ever concealed behind regu- | Bracewell said his idea is lations--was marched off on "simply a proposal that this is charges of irregular conduct |o,o way in which our attention aud srdered to do oun duty could be attracted by a commu- hob is privileges Je nity from some other part of the ¥ galaxy." Na "Of the thousands of millions of | planets in the galaxy likely to be |situated similarly to the earth in relation to their star, it is hard professor of electrical engineer- |ing at Stanford University sug- | gests intelligent extra-terrestrial {life may be trying to reach other civilizations in space by dropping unmanned satellites around the Peace Talks Over Algeria PARIS (AP) -- The Algerian rebel government-in-exile offered today to send Premier Ferha Abbas to Paris to discuss the Algerian revolt with the French government, The French government quickly agreed to receive Abbas, but offi cial sources said discussions would 'concern only a ceasefire, the disposition of weapons and the fate of the fithters.' Only after a ceasefire, they said, could arrangements be dis- cussed for a referendum on Al geria's future The rebel communique offering to send Abbas was in response to President Charles de radio address June 14 munique said an emissa be sen! to Paris to arrar bas' trip. De Gaulle has promised the rebels personal safety while in France and the right to leave France if negotiations break down. The communique noted that de Gaulle's statement reaffirmed the right of the Algerian people to determine their own future. In his radio address, de Gaulle also as sured the rebels they would have & a voice in arranging the referen dum he hds promised after peace is restored and in assuring the noresty of the vote count The rebel communique a that if the referendum is sur rounded by "indispensable guar antees of sincerity, the choice of CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 said \geria, to dismiss the possibility that some have more advanced civil- izations than ours. "In view of the acceleration with which technology develops advanced societies could be in-| credibly more advanced." | SEND OUT PROBES Bracewell suggests an ad- |vanced planet might airéady be doing what man is on the point |of doing 'sending probes to other stars.' ' The extra-terrestrials, he ex- plained today, may be sending | satellites around stars with likely- [looking planets in an effort to {make contact with another civil ization. A recording in the satel- lite might be triggered by our radio signals. "They wouldn't know there {would be a technical community here," he said. "In fact, there hasn't been except for the last lwo or three decades." If such a messenger were placed around our sun by_some distant planet, earth scientists could probably detect it. Auto Industry Asks Taritfs On U.K. Cars . OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- § | ister Diefenbaker indicated today the Canadian automobile industry has asked the government to im- pose tariffs on British car im- | said in the Commons in reply to Paul Martin (L--Essex East) that the Canadian Automo. bile Chamber of Comerce told him Friday that 'car imports from Britain enter Canada duty- free while there are duties on Ca- nadian ' cars exported into the United Kingdom. The Canadian automobile indus- try had asked for "equality," Mr Diefenbaker added. The prime minister also said the industry has asked for a study of the valuation of imported cars for the purpose of levying duty, A study is in progress, as is the FERHAT ABBAS the Algerian people would, with out doubt, be independence." De' Gaulle has said that he 'is con- fident the Algerians will vote to keep strong links with France. The rebels' acceptance is cer- tain to stir outcries among right- ists in both Algeria and France. These circles, along with the! French army, are opposed to ne gotiations with the rebels De Gaulle has said the talks in a wuld be confined to con ditions for a ceasefire to end the nationalist now in its sixth yedr, partment, Mr, Diefenbaker said.' fa . 'Mystery Satellite May Circle Earth STANFORD, Calif. (AP) -- A| to a sympathetic nation after the Far Eastern disasters which overtook him. But it is a sym- pathy bound to get lost in an uproar. The uproar is the coming pres- idential campaign in which one of the issues will be Eisenhower himself on the question of his leadership or the lack of it. The humiliations inflicted on |Eisenlower were personal and national: In Tokyo, rioting mobs forced the cancellation of his trip to Japan; in American » occupied Okinawa Sunday the rioting of They would have to experiment {until they found the right radio| | frequency signal to trigger it to| broadcast its message. Then [there would be the problem of decoding the message. Many scientists believe intelli- gent life probably exists in thou- |sands of other planets circling |distant stars, The problem is how |to establish contact. president to return to the airport Dr. Bracewell describes the|by back streets. satellite as "a reasonable thing | This may not be the end, to do." "I think its something we REDS MAY STIR BREW might~undertake ourselves.in due! The presidential campaign will course, {be even more turbulent if be- "Such a probe may be here [tween now and election day next now, .in our solar system, trying | November the Russians and Chin- to make its presence known to/ese Communists create new us." |crises or new ways to embarrass [the United States. | Until cancer pushed Secretary {of State John Foster Dulles out Oshawa Men Join lof the picture early in 1959 and |then killed him, Eisenhower for Demonstrators |years had been accused of lack- OTTAWA (CP) -- Some 300!ing leadership, With Dulles gone, members of the Baltic Federa-|this changed. tion of Canada staged an anti-| Eisenhower then began to as- Communist demonstration out-|sert himself in foreign affairs cide of the Soviet Embassy Satur-| more actively or at least more day by driving past in nearly 100 openly than when Dulles seemed cars. | The demonstration marked the ire the Show, 2t0h anniversary of the Soviet IKE'S DECISIONS army's occupation of Latvia, Es-| This was recognized 'and com- Ike's Leadership Campaign Issue anti-American mobs caused the 2 Aircraft Missing In 'Quebec Area RENTON CET civilian aircraft were reported missing in starred journey to the Far East If everything had gone as Eisenhower apparently assumed it would--bringing more peace in ! the world Hye. rie; bi tri | the Thetford Mines Que., area to. Series ume) gay, part of a four-plane flight phal journeys to the far corners en route from Dumphy, N.B., to of the earth -- his leadership Montreal, the RCAF Search and | would hardly have been a cam-| Rescue headquarters reported. | paign issue. One of the aircraft was re- [ Perhaps if Dulles had lived|ported at noon "still visible on none of the disasters would have|the radarscopes at the RCAF post happened, | at Ste. Silvestre in the Laurentian | ! called it murder "with a profes- Executive, Friend and woman were found shot to death Sunday night and police sional touch." Marion Bagshaw, 36 - year - old secretary believed originally from Ottawa, and Glenn Harris Kivell, 48-year-old office manager who came from Windsor 12 years ago, were sprawled in the blood- spattered kitchen of Miss Bag- shaw's farmhouse outside this Kivell was manager of the tabulating machine section of the Drug Trading Company Limited in Toronto; Miss Bagshaw was a tabulating machine expert with Medical Welfare Plan in Toronto, The man lived next door to the woman, Police said the shootings oc- curred Saturday night but it wasn't until Sunday night that the bodies were discovered. DRINKING BEER The couple had been sitting at a kitchen table drinking beer when the killer sprayed the room with ,303-calibre slugs. Miss Bagshaw was shot while sitting and was found that way, her legs still crossed and a hali- prepared salad nearby, Kivell was at her feet. Police said he likely jumped from his chair and tried to shield himselt Dead Morton, at whose neighboring farm Kivell boarded, found the bodies. He went to find whether Miss Bagshaw had seen Kivell, who "always called when he wasn%- coming home for the night." SAW BODY "I looked through the window and I could see her sitting in the kitchen chair with her legs crossed. I could only see her legs so I couldn't see that she was dead, I couldn't see him at all." He knocked and rang the door« bell, then, with his father, forced his way in, Police said there was no sign of a scuffle, no shell casings and no rifle found on the premises. Three finger-size holes were ripped through the ceiling at' the back of the house, One bullet was jammed in the tiled ceiling. "We'll probably find some of the spent bullets away out in the field somewhere," a police officer said No motive was immediately apparent, GOOD NEIGHBORS : The Mortons described the slain pair as "the world's best neigge bors. They were real nice people. They'd do anything for you." "Ll don't think they had any enemies. They didn't seem to know many people." with his hands. One finger was shot away. Inspector David Adair of the ial police eriminal al juve, several "in 'the face ' head." said: "The killer knew what he was doing. We might be a long time clues." Angus Morton, 32, son of Harry solving this. There aren't any real| Miss .K C Legge, associate manager of Drug Trading Company Lime rited, said Kivell came from the Ford Motor Company at Didi Mel Bagshaw, the woman's Another senior police official] father, was reported on his way to Toronto from Ottawa. Neighbors said they heard shots Saturday but paid little attention. Bagshaw and Kivell had been using a .22-calibre rifle for target practice in recent days. He might have been shrewd|3rea. He is lost and low on fuel." enough to have understood the| It was not known immediately angry mood in Tokyo and Okin- how many were aboard the awa and have kept them off the| Planes. | president's itinerary, particularly The RCAF reported that "four after the episode of the U-2 spy|civilian aircraft filed flight plans | plane, the summit collapse, and from Dumphy, N.B., near Freder- Khrushchev"s humiliating cancel-|icton, for the Montreal area." lation of Eisenhower's trip to] "Two made it and two are Russia. missing." LATE NEWS FLASHES Oshawa Man Killed In Mishap BARRIE -- Camern William Morris Smith, 35, of Oshawa, was instantly killed in a shooting accident near Barrie Sunday. Provincial Police at Barrie say that the victim was at the farm home of Gordon Chapman, RR2 Phelpston, seven miles east of Elmvale when the shooting occurred. Police say that Chapman an ardent hunter and trapper, and Smith were ex- amining a rifle when it discharged, killing Smith. The body is being moved today from the Lynn Funeral Home in Elmvale to the Armstrong Funeral Home in Oshawa. ¥ 2 Railroad Men Go To Jail OSHAWA -- A CPR conductor and engineer, with a total of 80 years of railroading between them, decided to go to jail for ten days in protest rather than pay $25 fines after they were convicted this morning of blocking Park Rd. S. for more tonia and Lithuania. Demonstra- mented upon. Here are some of tors came from Toronto, London, [the decisions he made after Hamilton and Oshawa, Dulles' death; To go to the oper Tis Biared loudly, but nol cumami; to invite Premier bassy "The cars made a double Khrushchev here; and to make| circuit past the embassy, which | several goodwill tours of his own: | turned tightly closed venetian|His 1l-nation journey to Europe, | blinds. towards the demonstra- Africa and Asia; his Latin-Amer- tors. ican trip; and finally the ill- Russian Spies Active In U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) The| The FBI says "just as surely as if mcans en they c¢ Soviet planes had been sent over aerial photos they this country," the Russians have through commercial obtained aerial photos of dozens nels, the report said of major U.S. cities and vital As an example, cited areas, case of an assistant Soviet Some of the photos were ob- attaché who offered $700 to a tained through espionage, others photographer to take photos of legally, according to an FBI/New York that were not com "black book" made public dur- mercially available ing the weekend by the Senate] The FBI said (he Rassians internal security subcommittee. began subverting Americans to Senate. investigators said Rus buy aerial photos for them after sian espionage activities docu- restrictions were ordered five mented in the report make the years ago on certain types of recent American U-2 spy plane data Soviet citizens in the United incident "pale into insignifi-|States could acquire. cance." The gathering of aerial photos| The report said Soviet agents|is only one phase of Soviet bloe for three decades 'have en-| intelligence activity in the United gaged in extensive espionage States, the report said. It de-| acitivities against the United scribed Communist recruitmenty States and through the years/of American agents," industrial have procured a volume of in-|espionage, the spy role of Iron Soviets resorice othe wante ch t the air insurrection jn Al- usual practice in the revenue de- formation 'which would stagger Curtain officials in the U.S. and Shown in centre," snipping the { ribbon in front of the main bo the imaghnation." other facets. than five minutes. Louis Russell, 62, and Michael Antonette, 53, of Toronto said they didn't feel they were responsible for the blockage, The Socialists and other opposi- the Diet but the Socialists had against the legislation. a nationwide strike Wednesday Japan's Premier In New Trouble TOKYO (AP--Some leaders of Premier Nobusuke Kishi's con- servative party today joined the left wing in a new, last-ditch fight to postpone the exchange of documents sealing Japan's new security pact with the United States. The move put new pressures on the weary 64 - year - old prime minister, who has been battling for weeks to maintain Japan's military links with America. Early today, Kishi's ruling Lib- eral-Democrats gave quick ap- proval in the Diet's upper house to legislation adjusting Japanese laws to conform with provisions in the new treaty, SOCIALISTS ABSENT The legislation caught the So- cialist opposition by surprise. None of its members was pres- ent when the voting took place. tion groups have been boycotting promised to wage a new fight Already confronting Kishi are called by the Communist & 1. fluenced Sohyo Labor Federation and new demonstrations by the fanatical Zengakuren Student Federation. Four factional leaders in Kishi"s party demanded that he resign immediately and put off the exchange of treaty documents with the United States pending the outcome of new elections. TWO PLANS ' They planned a two-fold attack --an appeal to the U.S, Senate to withhold its own ratification, and a request for Support rom the powerful middle-road factions in the Liberal-Democrat party. The security treaty was ratle fied automatically at midnight Saturday despite the pressure of continued demonstrations and vie olence. Now the treaty must be rati- fied by the U.S. Senate, which is expected to act this week after the return of President Eisen- hower from his Asian tour, The violence succeeded in its goal of keeping Eisenhower from stop. ping in Tokyo, La GLENHOLME SCHOOL FOR RETARDED OPENED New Glenholme School for retarded children was officially opened in Oshawa Saturday. trance, Simcoe street south, is Mrs W. Wilson, president of the Oshawa and District Asso- ciation for Retarded Children. Others in the picture are from left A. Holdsworth, past presi dent ot the association and chairman of the opening cere- monies; Ald. Albert V, Wal ker, representing Mayor Ly- man A' Gifford; T. D. Thomas, MPP, speaker at the opening and Howard R. Beattle, representative from the Ontar io Department of Education, Yor details please turn to Page " ~Oshawa fimes Photo,